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WSWS : News
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: Britain
Britains rich get richer even as recession begins to
bite
By Simon Whelan
14 May 2008
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The choice of headline to mark 20th aniversary of the Sunday
Times Rich List will hardly have given the newspapers
editor sleepness nights: Rich Get Richer under New Labour.
The same headline would suffice for each of the past 10 years.
But this time the uninterupted growth of wealth amongst the
already super-rich takes place amidst a period of extreme economic
turbulence, during which the living standards of working people
have fallen sharply. As Sunday Times journalist Philip
Beresfords opening gambit illustrates: Even as the
storm clouds gather, Britiains super-rich have never been
richer.
Not only are the super-rich utterly impervious to the extortionate
recent rises in the cost of living, but their wealth grows whether
economic conditions are favourable or not. While house prices
in the UK have begun to fall, reports in the media detail how
the rarified West London housing market of the international super-rich
is insulated from such downward pressures and continues to climbalbeit
at a slightly slower rate.
The accumulated wealth of those on the rich list has grown
to £412.8 billion, an increase of almost £53 billion
from last year. Growth has fallen by more than a quarter, from
last years rate of 20 percent, to 14.7 percent. Of this
years top 10, only three were born in Britain. Indian-born
number one Lakshmi Mittals wealth grew by an astonishing
44 percent, mainly by virtue of swallowing up more international
steel producing facilities through mergers. Such business manoevres
usually result in consolidation and redundency notices for staff
who find their jobs duplicated.
In his new book on international elites David Rothkopf observes,
The rise of nation states produced national ruling classes.
It would be odd if the current integration of the world economy
did not produce new global elitesbusiness people and financiers
who run global companies.
Writing in his Observer column about Rothkopfs
new publication, Will Hutton noted how Prime Minister Gordon Brown
has surrounded himself with former employees of Morgan Stanley
and Goldman Sachs. Jonathan Powell, former premier Tony Blairs
chief of staff, has joined Morgan Stanley and Blair himself receives
a large stipend from Goldman Sachs.
The Sunday Times then addresses itself to the relatively
tragic fate of British-based billionaires. Whilst the international
super-rich are, in the words of the Sunday Times, getting
richer quicker, by contrast British-born billionaires with
substantial UK investments suffered from the economic slowdown
far more than their international counterparts. Falls were expected
in fortunes reliant upon British retail, property and investment.
British-born Sir Philip Green, who owns BHS and TopShop, saw his
wealth decline by 10 percentlosing £570 million in
one year. Richard Branson lost £400 million off a previous
£2.7 billion due in no small measure to the drop in Virgin
Medias share value. Vincent Tchenguiz, a British investor
and property dealer, suffered a 76 percent fall in his wealth.
Rupert Murdochs flagship newspaper complains (in what
will be seen as a warning by the Brown government) that whereas
we used to lead the field with the near-20 percent growth rates,
our 14.7 percent increase this year seems positvely pedestrian.
Rich list lead writer Beresford points to contemporary increase
of 22.6 percent in the wealth of the worlds super-rich and
of a staggering 26.6 percent increase amongst Europes super-rich
over the last year.
Beresford then complains about the new single payment of £30,000
annual tax levied on those deemed to be non-domicile (not resident)
in Britainirrespective of their actual wealthdespite
this being little more than loose change for those on its list.
The UKs non-domicile rule in fact still allows the international
super-rich to make London their home without paying taxes on earnings
from abroad. And they pay very little or nothing on their British-based
profits.
But Beresford is worried about bigger things to come. He notes
that the storm clouds are gathering and worries that the super-rich
have become a convenient target, writing, In
times of economic uncertainty, the gulf between rich and poor
is rarely ignored by those looking for a convenient scapegoat.
By way of defence, the Sunday Times hails the money donated
by a few of the super-rich to charity.
The degree of wealth disparity in the UK is astounding and
Beresford is not the only commentator to note the increasing hostility
towards the super-rich. A couple of days after the publication
of the list, Dominic Lawson opened his weekly column in the Independent
newspaper by stating, If there is a bloody Bolshevik revolution
in this country, I think I can guess the inflamatory pamphlet
which will be waved by the people putting the wealthy up against
the walls and shooting them. It will not be the Communist Manifesto.
It will be the Sunday Times Rich List.
Though decrying what he described as the politics of
envy, Lawson states that The 2008 edition, published
just a couple of days ago, was more eye poppingly voyeuristic
than ever: 110 pages of non-stop salivation over fortunes which
the rest of us could only dream about.
He then notes that the Archbishop of Cantebury, Rowan Williams,
was interviewed only days prior to the rich list publication,
telling BBC interviewer John Humphreys, The more you have
a disproportion between what people are earning and what they
are worth, the more we have astronomical sums with no clear rationale
behind them, the less credibility the whole thing has.
Williams added that the enormous disparities between the super-rich
and ordinary working people brings about a degree of envy
and cynicism ... that leads people to feel alienated from the
rest of society.
Lawsons derision is not directed against inequality,
but at those like Williams who presume to draw attention to the
elephant in the room. The Archbishops sin is to make the
obvious connection between the gargantuan wealth accumulated at
the one pole of society with the increasing immiseration and insecurity
at the other. Willliams, writes Lawson, is one of those
who believes that over the past decade under New Labour the least
well off have got poorer as the rich got richer, and that the
latter fact is in some way responsible for the former.
Lawson spends the rest of his column arguing that inequality,
regardless of repeated academic research findings, is not really
growing. And besides, he pleads, any attempt to redistribute wealth
through taxation is self-defeating.
But such statementsthe mantra of Thatcher, Blair and
Brownring increasingly hollow. In the UK millions of working
people live a life of perpetual financial insecurity and crippling
debts. They suffer the daily ignonimy of waiting nervously for
the latest bank or mortgage statement, or looking on as petrol
gauges and pay-as-you go utility meters tick over. Newpapers,
even the upmarket broadsheets, are full of advice for readers
about how to tighten their belts, how to reduce debt and avoid
bankruptcy or how to save money on household shopping and utility
bills.
While house prices rose and credit was readily available, the
Labour government and a supportive media was able to dazzle sufficicent
numbers of people with the illusion of rising living standards.
No longer. Gordon Brown has constructed an economy built on unsustainable
levels of debt. Not for nothing did Guardian economics
editor Larry Elliott call his book on Blair and Browns economic
policies Fantasy Island. That some commentators are now
worried by the vulgar worshiping of money represented by the Sunday
Times Rich List is out of fear of the social and political
struggles that will inevitably be provoked by the onset of recession.
See Also:
Britain: Welfare Reform Act to force
sick and vulnerable into work
[10 May 2008]
Britain: Labours electoral meltdown
continues to worsen
[7 May 2008]
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